Ndeh Ntumuzah was a remarkable Pan-African spirit who was one of
the leaders of one of the foremost Pan-Africanist liberation movements
in Africa, the
Union
of the Peoples of Cameroon (UPC). He was one of the sterling leaders
of the liberation movements of Africa. He was a freedom fighter who
devoted his life to African independence. He worked with Ruben Um Nyobé,
Félix-Roland Moumié, Kwame Nkrumah, Patrice Lumumba, Abdel Nasser,
Frantz Fanon, Walter Rodney and those leaders who believed in the full
emancipation of Africa. The UPC and Ndeh were independent of China or
the Soviet Union and independent of France and the United States. In our
discussions, Ndeh stressed the importance of independence because at
that moment African liberation movements were torn by the Sino-Soviet
split, Ndeh Ntumazah was born in Mankon, Bamenda in 1926. He was
residing in London, United Kingdom when he joined the ancestors on 21
January 2010. He was 84 years old.
NTUMUZAH AND THE UNION DES
POPULATIONS DU CAMEROUN (UPC)
I first met Ndeh Ntumuzah in the
home of Walter Rodney in Dar es Salaam in June 1974. I was staying at
the home of Walter Rodney at the time of the 6th Pan African Congress.
Ntumuzah was then living in exile in Tanzania, under the protection of
the Tanzanian government. When I arrived in Dar es Salaam a week before
the congress, I met Ndeh before Walter went off to the History Teachers’
Conference in Morogoro. There were three of us in the house, Ndeh,
myself and Omowale. Omowale, originally from the Grenadines, was in
exile in Tanzania, after his involvement in the students’ struggles at
Sir
George Williams University in 1969. When Walter returned from
Morogoro, he fell ill and it was Ndeh, Omowale and I who cared for him.
Walter was admitted to the Muhimbili Hospital and the three of us cooked
and took food to him at the hospital. Slowly, as I was driving back and
forth between the home in the university and the hospital, I began to
learn of the life of Ndeh Ntumuzah.
We had discussions late into
the night on the history of the Cameroonian struggle. He spoke of how
the struggles of the peoples of Algeria, Vietnam and the Cameroon were
interwoven. Like the settlers in Algeria, the colonists in Cameroon used
the most vicious racism to oppress the people.
I learnt that Ndeh
was one of the freedom fighters of the UPC and that he had joined the
organisation in 1948 as a young man, devoting himself to full
independence. This made Ndeh one of the top five leaders of one of the
most radical freedom parties in Africa after the Second World War. The
other leaders were Ruben Um Nyobe (1913-1958), Ouandie Ernest
(1924-1971), Abel Kingue (1924-1964) and Felix Roland Moumiė
(1925-1960). Cameroon had been handed to the German imperialists at the
Berlin conference in 1885. After the first imperialist war, the peoples
of the Cameroon were divided between the French and British
colonialists. After the Second World War, Cameroon was under the
trusteeship of France and the British, courtesy of the United Nations.
Ndeh had been involved in building the UPC as a force capable of uniting
people from all parts of Cameroon, regardless of class status or ethnic
association.
IMPORTANCE OF THIS HISTORY FOR YOUNG
PAN-AFRICANS
Indeed, for younger Pan-Africanists, the history of
the political independence of the UPC is worth studying because of its
belief that liberation struggle should be grounded in all of the peoples
of Cameroon. The party did not make any distinctions between the French
and British Cameroonians, between Christians and Muslims, between men
and women, or between the different ethnic groups. It was a remarkably
united movement.
Also, the party believed in the full
independence of the Cameroon. The UPC had broken with the French
Communist party over the question of independence. Younger readers might
not know that in the late forties and early fifties, the European
communist parties wanted the colonial territories of France to remain
part of France. The UPC, founded in 1948, was originally part of the
Rassemblement
Démocratique Africain (commonly known as the RDA), led by former
president of Côte d'Ivoire, Félix Houphouët-Boigny. Founded in Bamako in
1946, the RDA was a nationalist movement that had been inspired by the
anti-colonial struggles all over Africa and the Third World. The UPC
supported independence in the Cameroon, Algeria and Vietnam while Félix
Houphouët-Boigny joined the anti-communist camp of imperialism. Félix
Houphouët-Boigny became a darling of western imperialists, and under his
leadership Côte d'Ivoire became a cockpit for imperial subversion in
Africa. Today Côte d'Ivoire is reaping the unfortunate fruits of the
kind of divide and rule policies of Boigny in the Côte d'Ivoire. Félix
Houphouët-Boigny was among those Francophone leaders who accepted a
version of independence that reinforced French political control. In
1958, General de Gaulle, in a draft constitution inaugurating the Fifth
Republic in France, proposed a referendum which gave colonies the chance
to choose between the French community or independence, by either voting
‘Yes’ or ‘No’. A majority positive vote would mean that the colony in
question was willing to accept the French proposal of a French community
made up of colonies and the colonial power, while a majority negative
vote would mean total rejection of the community and complete
independence.
On 28 September 1958, among all the French African
colonies, only Guinea voted ‘No’, hence obtaining total independence
from France. Cameroon was not included in this farcical scheme because
this was a UN trust territory and the French had not yet liquidated the
UPC.
The UPC believed that Pan-Africanists should be
ideologically self-reliant. Banned by the French colonialist because it
was anti-colonial, the UPC was marginalised by those liberation
movements who sought to curry favour with Moscow. At the height of the
Cold War, anti colonial movements were pressured to take sides in the
Sino-Soviet struggle in order to access material and military support.
When there was a split in the socialist camp between the USSR and China,
the UPC was able to stay out of this manipulation because it was a
liberation movement whose force derived from the strength of workers,
poor peasants, traditional healers and cultural workers. This ensured
that the UPC could not be easily defeated politically.
Fourthly,
the UPC worked hard to gain the diplomatic support of the non-aligned
movement and the United Nations. The UPC successfully isolated France at
the UN and worked with the Algerians to carry forward the position of
full independence for Africa. The UPC worked very hard with other
non-aligned forces to strengthen the decolonisation Committee of the
United Nations.
Finally, the UPC was a Pan African organisation
that believed in the unity of Africa. It was one of the leading parties
represented at the All African People’s Conference in Ghana in
1958.
The same harsh and repressive policies that France used
against the freedom fighters in Algeria were used against the freedom
fighters in Cameroon. France had outlawed the UPC in 1955, branding this
African liberation movement as a communist party. Throughout the
building of the party, Ndeh worked in what he called a ‘twilight’
position – that is, he worked above and below ground. He was known to
appear and disappear making it difficult for the French to track his
movements. But France had many educated Africans who were working for
the French security services. These were elements from the evolué
strata, who loved France more than they loved Africa. It was the work of
the French security that led to the capture of the popular strategist
and organiser Ruben Um Nyobé (1913–1958). Ruben Um Nyobé was killed by
the French colonialists in the midst of liberation struggles. Like Che
Guevara, he was captured alive but later executed by the French colonial
overlords. France worked hard to execute the leaders of the UPC, buying
off some, tricking others and building a strata of Africans who would be
forever subservient to France and European interests in Africa.
Cameroon, Gabon and the Congo were three territories that were
tremendously rich, and Europe ensured that African nationalism would be
killed in these areas to protect their interests.
Part of the
reason many Cameroonian youth do not know this history is because France
sought to assassinate both the leaders of the UPC and the history of the
UPC. After killing Ruben Um Nyobé in 1958, the French secret service
poisoned the next leader of the UPC Félix-Roland Moumié. He was killed
in Switzerland. Ndeh was on the list for assassination and he related
the kind of charmed life that he lived while fighting against French
colonialism. After the assassination of Moumie, France managed the
internal puppet parties to a form of ‘independence’ where French
companies dominated the economy. The French fought the UPC and guided a
puppet regime to power, led by Ahmadou Babatoura Ahidjo. French
intellectuals covered up the brutal crimes of France and it is not by
accident that some of the foremost French scholars who now write on ‘the
politics of the belly’ in Africa are children of the racist colonists
who worked to derail the independence of the
Cameroon.
CONVERSATIONS WITH NDEH
Ndeh told me of his
itinerant life as a freedom fighter in Africa. He worked in Africa with
the support of the Ghanaian peoples. His life remained under threat from
the French secret service and Ahidjo. By the time the imperialist forces
assassinated Patrice Lumumba, the French, British and US neo-colonial
forces were in full control of certain parts of Africa and the forces of
Portuguese and British colonialism worked with apartheid to derail
African freedom. Every leader who supported independence was called a
terrorist and a communist. The UPC was isolated outside as a communist
organisation and with the carrot and the stick; France worked hard to
eliminate the grassroots leaders of the UPC. Ahidjo was very forceful in
destroying the nationalist networks in the country. Organisers were
arrested, killed and driven into exile.
Ndeh was living in exile
in Ghana. After Nkrumah was overthrown, the UPC forces and diplomats had
to leave Ghana. Ndeh later moved to Egypt. When Cameroon established
diplomatic relations with Egypt, Ndeh had to leave Egypt. Ndeh could not
go to Guinea because Sekou Toure wanted to have good relations with
Ahidjo. He then moved to Algeria. When Ahidjo opened diplomatic
relations with the Algerian leaders, Ndeh Ntumuzah had to leave Algeria.
He was accepted in exile in Tanzania. During this aggressive period of
Ahidjo’s rule, Cameroon came under the complete military, commercial,
cultural and ideological control of France. This external control was
even more rigid after Cameroon started to export oil. Once France
established the liquidation of the UPC, Ahmadou Babatoura Ahidjo was of
no use to them. They tricked him and removed him. The nature of his
removal demonstrated that he had no firm political base among the
Cameroonian people.
It was during these conversations that Ndeh
revealed his close connection to Fanon and we learnt of the intense
efforts of the French to kill Fanon. Fanon had been an effective doctor,
freedom fighter and diplomat for the FLN of Algeria. Born in the
Caribbean island of Martinique, Fanon worked in the Algerian liberation
struggle and worked very closely with the allies, the UPC. Ndeh was
warning us of journalists who were in the service of French Secret
service. There was one remarkable story of the journalist writing about
the hospitalisation of Fanon in Rome. When Fanon read about this in the
newspaper, he demanded to be removed from the room. The very next day
gunmen and paid assassins of the French shot up the room where Fanon had
moved from.
These stories of hospitalisation and health were not
just historical because after a week, Walter Rodney was not getting
better. The doctors at the hospital could not diagnose what was wrong
with Walter Rodney. A US doctor at the hospital recommended to us that
Walter Rodney should probably be transferred to Washington, D.C. to
Walter Reed Hospital. As soon as we left the hospital Ndeh immediately
objected, reminding us that Fanon had died in the hands of the US at the
Walter Reed Hospital. Immediately, there was a consultation with Joe
Kanywanyi (of the University of Dar es Salaam) and Andrew Shija (of the
TANU Youth league) on seeking the support of the Chinese government for
Walter Rodney to be treated in China. We immediately requested that
Walter be released from the hospital. While we were making the
arrangements for assistance from China, Walter slowly recovered; he had
been suffering from exhaustion and malaria. With rest, care and good
nutritious food, Walter was able to recover.
THE 6TH PAN AFRICAN
CONGRESS
During the 6th Pan African Congress in 1974, Ndeh could
not attend and participate in the conference because of his refugee
status, but he met with us every night for our sessions in promoting the
cause of liberation movements in Africa. During the 6th PAC our small ad
hoc group typed up documents on the on-going liberation struggles in all
parts of Africa. In those days the OAU did not recognise liberation
movements in independent African states. Ndeh was familiar with the
struggles in the Congo, (then stabilized under Mobutu and later to be
called Zaire) the struggles in Ethiopia and other less known struggles
such as those in the Comoros. In those days, many of those who called
themselves communists opposed the holding of the 6th Pan African
Congress in Tanzania. This was especially the case of those liberation
movements that were aligned to the Soviet Union. They had made a false
dichotomy between Pan-Africanism and Communism. Ndeh was aware of the
experiences of George Padmore with the Soviet Union and his reasons for
writing the polemic, ‘Pan-Africanism or Communism’. However, both Walter
and Ndeh understood the need for a Pan-African movement grounded in the
oppressed Africans at home and abroad. This was the spirit behind the
essay by Walter Rodney, ‘Towards the 6th Pan-African Congress: Aspects
of the International Class Struggle in Africa, America and the
Caribbean.’
NDEH IN EXILE IN LONDON
Ahidjo continued to
pursue Ndeh Ntumuzah in Africa, and Ndeh became an exile in London. The
condition of his exile was a tacit understanding with the French that
they did not attempt to assassinate Ndeh in the UK. I renewed my
relationship with Ndeh in London in 1977 when Ndeh was living with Ahmad
Rajab. We would meet often to discuss Pan-Africanism and the African
revolution. From both Rodney and Ntumuzah, I learnt that Pan-Africanists
had to be completely self-reliant and independent of intellectual fads.
Ndeh worked with our support groups in London, supporting liberation in
the Caribbean and in Africa. In his conversations in London, Ndeh spoke
of his village and his longing for home, but he did not make this
longing turn into a compromised subservience to neo-colonialism.
Additionally, Ndeh used to say that in his village there was such a
strong memory of the destructiveness of the slave trade that clans were
always thinking of how to make new and healthy links with their brothers
and sisters who were sold across the Atlantic.
When Walter Rodney
was assassinated, Ndeh’s spirit was not broken; he was still of the view
that Pan-Africanists should continue the fight. Ndeh urged us to
intensify the struggles for Pan-African emancipation and to carry
forward the ideas and principles of self emancipation. He believed that
we should organise, not agonise. He had lived through the assassination
of numerous leaders and understood that the Pan-African revolution could
not be assassinated.
Ndeh, who had been one of the foremost
leaders of the African liberation struggles was in 1980 working as a
parking lot attendant in London. Ndeh did not compromise with
imperialism and did not go back to Cameroon to join the plunder of the
society under the French and Paul Biya.
HIS LAST YEARS
In
his time in London, Ndeh supported the black liberation struggles and
was very close to the youth who were in motion. At the time of the New
Cross fire (in 1981), he was close to Frank and the youths who were
opposed to British racism. I moved to Tanzania in 1981 and saw him
occasionally when I passed through London on the way to the Caribbean.
He was then living with his children in South London. The last time I
saw Ndeh was in January 2006. I had travelled to Tanzania for a Walter
Rodney conference and had requested Ahmed Rajab to take me to the home
of Ndeh. We went with Tajudeen Abdul Rajheem. Ndeh was frail. I had
wanted to ask Ndeh about a group that I met in Venezuela in October 2005
at a Pan-African meeting. This was a group that called itself a
liberation movement, fighting for the independence of Southern Cameroon.
I had listened very carefully to the husband and wife team from the
USA,who were presenting documents as freedom fighters calling for armed
struggles in the Cameroon, so that Southern Cameroon could secede from
the rest of the Cameroon.
I wondered if the Chavez government in
Venezuela had the intellectual infrastructure to understand the genuine
liberation movements in Africa. After listening very carefully to the
husband and wife team and seeking to understand their position of the
wider emancipation of Africa, I sensed that their movement, Southern
Cameroon’s Peoples’ Organisation (SCAPO), was a front for elements
hostile to Pan-Africanism. As a Pan-Africanist, it was not that I was
opposed to secession in Africa (after all we had supported the Eritrean
struggles for independence), but it was clear that we could not as
Pan-Africanists support armed struggles for secession that did not have
a firm base among the working people. On this question, Tajudeen and I
were in agreement.
We were not able to discuss the question of
the secessionist movement with Ndeh that evening, because Ndeh’s illness
and vision impairment did not provide the conditions for a real
discussion. In fact Ndeh’s health was so poor that he had asked us,
‘What is Kwame Nkrumah doing these days?’
TEACHING THE YOUTH
ABOUT THE FREEDOM FIGHTERS IN AFRICA
France and the puppet
leaders in Cameroon have sought to liquidate the UPC and to liquidate
the memory of the UPC. French intellectuals who cover up the criminal
acts of the colonial past and present have become experts at writing on
corruption, the criminalisation of the state and the politics of the
belly of Africa. This genre of scholarship – along with the new focus on
the so called ‘failed states’ in Africa – is meant to reinforce
psychological warfare against Africans. It is not by accident that some
of these leading French scholars were socialised in the colonial context
of the Cameroon.
Ndeh Ntumuzah was one of the leading freedom
fighters in the struggles for independence and emancipation in Africa.
He worked with the Cameroonian independence struggles, the Algerian
independence struggles and while in exile in London, he worked with the
democracy movement of Kenya and Zanzibar. He worked with the free Ngugi
committee. He did not succumb to the regional, ethnic and religious
differences that were promoted by the colonialists and carried out with
fervour by the neo colonial evolués in Africa today. It is important
that the youth of Africa today study and learn of the unflinching
passion for true independence grounded in the people. Cameroon is a rich
country and with the people mobilised, this society can be transformed.
In the interim, the Cameroonian youth have focused their energies on
making good music and producing great soccer players.
BROUGHT TO
YOU BY PAMBAZUKA NEWS
* Horace Campbell is a peace activist who
is working to realise the dream of the late Tajudeen Abdul Raheem of
building African Unity by 2015.
* Please send comments to
editor@pambazuka.org or
comment online at
Pambazuka
News.